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World / Americas

'People are going to die': USAID cuts create panic in Africa

Published: 05 Feb 2025 - 05:38 pm | Last Updated: 05 Feb 2025 - 05:58 pm
(FILES) A USAID and American flag fly before Congressional Democrats hold news conference outside of United States Agency for International Development (USAID) headquarters in Washington, DC, on February 3, 2025. (Photo by Mandel NGAN / AFP)

(FILES) A USAID and American flag fly before Congressional Democrats hold news conference outside of United States Agency for International Development (USAID) headquarters in Washington, DC, on February 3, 2025. (Photo by Mandel NGAN / AFP)

AFP

Nairobi: President Donald Trump's decision to freeze foreign assistance has sent aid staff in Africa into "panic mode", with even HIV experimental treatment programmes stopped dead in their tracks.

Trump last week ordered a suspension of foreign assistance, while his billionaire ally Elon Musk has boasted he is putting the vast US humanitarian agency USAID "through the woodchipper".

That has included a 90-day suspension of all work by the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), which alone supports more than 20 million HIV patients and 270,000 health workers, according to an analysis from the Foundation for AIDS Research (amfAR).

Among its programmes, PEPFAR currently provides anti-retroviral treatments to 679,936 pregnant women living with HIV both for their own health and to prevent transmission to their children, the analysis said.

"During a 90-day stoppage, we estimate that this would mean 135,987 babies acquiring HIV," it said.

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who has been named acting head of USAID, has said "life-saving treatments" would be exempt from the freeze.
But frontline workers in Africa say facilities have already shut down.

"As we speak nothing is going on," said Daniel Aghan, head of a USAID-funded team of Kenyan science journalists providing information on health issues.
He told AFP research projects had abruptly stopped, even for patients midway through experimental treatment programmes.

He highlighted the MOSAIC (Maximizing Options to Advance Informed Choice for HIV Prevention) project, funded under PEPFAR, which tests new drugs and vaccines.

"The people who were the study candidates are going to have adverse health results because the study has just stopped all of a sudden," Aghan told AFP.
His own team of six science journalists have all lost their jobs, too.

"A lot of people are going to die because of lack of knowledge," he said.